Create account Log in

A Tonic For the Troops

[Edit]

Download links and information about A Tonic For the Troops by The Boomtown Rats. This album was released in 1978 and it belongs to New Wave, Punk, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 49:50 minutes.

Artist: The Boomtown Rats
Release date: 1978
Genre: New Wave, Punk, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 14
Duration: 49:50
Buy on Songswave €1.41
Buy on Songswave €1.41
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Like Clockwork 3:43
2. Blind Date 3:21
3. (I Never Loved) Eva Braun 4:37
4. Living In an Island 4:10
5. Don't Believe What You Read 3:07
6. She's So Modern 2:56
7. Me and Howard Hughes 3:11
8. Can't Stop 2:19
9. (Watch Out For) The Normal People 2:52
10. Rat Trap 5:10
11. Neon Heart (John Peel Radio Session) 4:08
12. Do the Rat (B-side) 2:12
13. D.U.N. L.O.A.G.H.A.I.R.E (B-side In Ireland) 2:15
14. Rat Trap (Live In Stoke) 5:49

Details

[Edit]

Though less than a year separated the Boomtown Rats' second album from their debut, the advances that the band had made remain staggering. Where their energies were once directed straight at the white-hot heart of punk, A Tonic for the Troops revealed a daring, even experimental pop act — one that might have worn the now-fashionable skinny ties on-stage, but whose disdain for the rest of the year's trends and obsessions was palpable. Lyrically, Bob Geldof was now streaking ahead of all the competition, while the frenetic "Like Clockwork" offered up a still-staggering collision between Kraftwerk and the Sex Pistols, a union that was as farsighted in its own way as any punk-reggae hybrid of the day. Elsewhere, the faintly Clash-like "Blind Date" and the Mach II mayhem of "She's So Modern" retained the group's new wave sensibilities, while the B-side "Do the Rat" (one of the 2005 remaster's four bonus tracks) remains one of the greatest punk parodies ever. It was the album's closing track, however, that penned the Boomtown Rats' future. A "Bohemian Rhapsody" for the blank generation, "Rat Trap" spun out of Geldof's already documented fascination with Jailbreak-era Thin Lizzy and the Bruce Springsteen of "Jungleland" to deliver a devastating accurate portrait of teenage wildlife circa 1978 — and grant the Boomtown Rats their first chart-topping single. Of the bonus tracks, two B-sides are joined by a previously unissued (and vastly superior) John Peel session take of the first album's "Neon Heart" and a live reprise of "Rat Trap." They're a nice addition to the album, but the studio "Rat Trap" has already climaxed the collection. Anything else is simply icing.